1,074 research outputs found

    Context Information for Fast Cell Discovery in mm-wave 5G Networks

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    The exploitation of the mm-wave bands is one of the most promising solutions for 5G mobile radio networks. However, the use of mm-wave technologies in cellular networks is not straightforward due to mm-wave harsh propagation conditions that limit access availability. In order to overcome this obstacle, hybrid network architectures are being considered where mm-wave small cells can exploit an overlay coverage layer based on legacy technology. The additional mm-wave layer can also take advantage of a functional split between control and user plane, that allows to delegate most of the signaling functions to legacy base stations and to gather context information from users for resource optimization. However, mm-wave technology requires high gain antenna systems to compensate for high path loss and limited power, e.g., through the use of multiple antennas for high directivity. Directional transmissions must be also used for the cell discovery and synchronization process, and this can lead to a non-negligible delay due to the need to scan the cell area with multiple transmissions at different directions. In this paper, we propose to exploit the context information related to user position, provided by the separated control plane, to improve the cell discovery procedure and minimize delay. We investigate the fundamental trade-offs of the cell discovery process with directional antennas and the effects of the context information accuracy on its performance. Numerical results are provided to validate our observations.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, in Proceedings of European Wireless 201

    Fast Cell Discovery in mm-wave 5G Networks with Context Information

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    The exploitation of mm-wave bands is one of the key-enabler for 5G mobile radio networks. However, the introduction of mm-wave technologies in cellular networks is not straightforward due to harsh propagation conditions that limit the mm-wave access availability. Mm-wave technologies require high-gain antenna systems to compensate for high path loss and limited power. As a consequence, directional transmissions must be used for cell discovery and synchronization processes: this can lead to a non-negligible access delay caused by the exploration of the cell area with multiple transmissions along different directions. The integration of mm-wave technologies and conventional wireless access networks with the objective of speeding up the cell search process requires new 5G network architectural solutions. Such architectures introduce a functional split between C-plane and U-plane, thereby guaranteeing the availability of a reliable signaling channel through conventional wireless technologies that provides the opportunity to collect useful context information from the network edge. In this article, we leverage the context information related to user positions to improve the directional cell discovery process. We investigate fundamental trade-offs of this process and the effects of the context information accuracy on the overall system performance. We also cope with obstacle obstructions in the cell area and propose an approach based on a geo-located context database where information gathered over time is stored to guide future searches. Analytic models and numerical results are provided to validate proposed strategies.Comment: 14 pages, submitted to IEEE Transaction on Mobile Computin

    PARFAIT:Privacy-preserving, secure, and low-delay service access in fog-enabled IoT ecosystems

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    Traditional fog-enabled IoT ecosystems always assume fully-trusted and secure fog nodes, offering computational capabilities and storage space closer to constrained IoT devices. However, such security-related assumptions can easily fall when considering the exposure of fog nodes’ location, the heterogeneity of device providers, and the ease of misuse and misconfigurations by end-users, to name a few. As a result, compromised fog nodes can stealthily steal sensitive information, such as the devices’ location, path, and private personal attributes. This paper presents PARFAIT, a privacy-preserving, secure, and low-delay framework for securely accessing services in fog-enabled IoT ecosystems. PARFAITguarantees low-delay authentication and authorization to local fog nodes, protecting the identity and the attributes possessed by the IoT devices. Moreover, PARFAITuses rolling ephemeral identities, providing unlinkability among access requests, thus preventing the tracking of mobile IoT devices by multiple compromised fog nodes. We performed several experimental tests on a reference proof-of-concept to show the viability of PARFAIT. Specifically, adopting an elliptic curve with a group size of 512 bits, PARFAITallows the access to a single protected resource in only 0.274 s, and such a delay rises to only 0.359 s with 10 consecutive requests (66.8% less than the quickest competing approach).</p
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